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Traffic crash stats show that drivers/riders are more likely to let their guard down and crash the closer they get to home. Same also would apply to someone who took the same route every day. My experience in particular involved a 4 way stop installed at an intersection behind where I lived. People ran it in all directions, in huge numbers and lots of crashed resulted. Enforcement was stepped up and lots of tickets written and finally drivers figured it out. City had tried traffic change signs and flashing lights at first but to little effect. Almost all the crashers and those that got tickets were local residents and those who also drove the same route every day. Common response was...."what stop signs?" FYI, they were clearly visible for almost 100 m in either direction, in a 50 k zone. |
I've seen that too when a new school zone sign went up around here. People are still blasting through at 50kph, even BC Transit drivers. And while I don't disagree that collision risks increase closer to home, I don't necessarily agree that it's entirely due to complacency. We're more likely to be driving near our home than anywhere else. More than work, more than the grocery store, etc. The simple fact that most vehicle trips start and end at home means a driver spends more time driving near his home than anywhere else. On the topic of observation... When several cars are travelling together in a well spaced pack at the same speed, not only is it easier to monitor the various vehicles around you but hazards also have a way of standing out and are more easily identifiable as such. |
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Quite often if I want to travel at a legal speed, my deviation from the average travel speed of the traffic immediately around me puts me at increased risk of being involved in a collision. |
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You guys remember the saying "guns don't kill, people do"... Same goes for speed, peoples inability to drive at a higher rate of speed or the vehicles mechanical condition can kill. But there is no excuse for posting a limit of 60km/h coming off the Golden Ears bridge. Don't be surprised if hwy #1 is going to be set at 80km/h. So yeah, limits should be increased in some areas. |
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If you sincerely believe that a driver travelling 15kph below the average traffic speed in his immediate vicinity is safer simply "because he's doing no more than the posted limit" then your opinion contradicts virtually every study done on this. If you want to engage in further discussion on this topic, please read through the many available reports and engineering studies done on this first. |
Have you seriously factored in however that while you may be at a greater risk of being involved in a collision while driving slower than surrounding traffic, the severity of a collision and the corresponding fatality rate will be greater if you were travelling at the higher rate of speed along with the rest of the traffic? |
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Speed limit is 50kph, traffic is flowing at 65kph. You, travelling at 50kph being hit by a vehicle making an unsafe lane change at 65kph aren't likely to be killed at that speed. Injured, yes. Seriously? Perhaps. However, your risk of being involved in the collision in the first place (and by extention risk of being injured or killed) decreases as your speed becomes more consistent with that of the vehicles around you. Now, let's look at this on the freeway where average travel speeds are frequently 20kph over the posted limit. You're doing 80kph and are hit by a car making an unsafe lane change at 100kph. Your chance of being seriously injured or killed at those speeds is much greater than in the first scenario above. Now you can go on and claim that the three dozen cars around you moving at 100kph should all have been doing 80kph, but at what point do you take responsibility for your own safety and recognize that perhaps it isn't wise for you to be the only one doing the speed limit? Enforcement shouldn't target absolute speed - it should focus on drivers who are travelling significantly faster or significantly slower than the flow of traffic at that time and place - the drivers who are statistically more likely to be involved in a collision. |
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I want you to think about the following three words: lowest common denominator. I have no doubt that you are a proficient driver, otherwise, you wouldn't be lobbying so hard to raise speed limits (right?!??). However, you also need to think about the rest of the driving population, who probably aren't as good a driver as you. Forcing them to drive at speeds outside of their comfort zone is only going to increase the frequency of poor decisions that are already being made by the majority of drivers on our roads today. |
There's always a risk that the "lowest common denominator" includes intoxicated/tired/etc.. drivers. Don't forget the inexperienced and the elderly. Perhaps if you want to set limits based on the LCD, then all the speed limits should be dropped to 30kph in town and 50kph on the freeway? |
Despite limits increasing by 10kph, average speeds only increased by 3.2 to 4kph: Quote:
Members 10-9 and Zulutango maintain that drivers simply hadn't noticed the increased speed limits and as such were suddenly in compliance with the law. So if these so called oblivious drivers haven't noticed the increase in speed limits, then what explains the reduction in collisions? Quote:
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they should improvised slow lane and fast lane specially in highway. there are a lot of dum drivers here in bc thats y there are a lot of accidents. |
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As far as Seb's comment about the unsafe lane change...An unsafe lane change is an unsafe lane change. Whether there's a speed differential or not, it can result in an accident. Also, if the person who is legally speeding clips the person who is following the law, it was unsafe due to the conditions; as Transience mentioned the LCD is often something to consider. My attitude around unpredictable drivers, around seemingly nervous drivers, around slower drivers...they're all different. it's situational awareness. Of course if we cherry-pick the scenarios that we want to give out we can get the answers we want. But that's not always reflective of reality. In the "do you drive with a camera rolling" thread, there was a case of a Subaru Legacy which changed lanes into one occupied by a minivan; both of which were travelling at the proper speed limit, yet there was a collision. Increased speed limits would not have been a factor there, and yet an unsafe lane change was made. Gasp! People can make mistakes regardless of speed! As far as your 10km/hr increase on highways, I haven't a clue why it was better. I can tell you that on my now-former daily commute on hastings street, there are some stretches where 60km is decently comfortable (Cassiar to Renfrew), and others where people will barely reach 20-30 (Renfrew to Nanaimo); and so increasing the speed limit is fairly pointless. Even during non-rush-hour traffic, the community is fairly active with people parking, crossing the street, and several schools in the area; kids are often unpredictable and the loss of reaction time in a situation like so would be quite dreadful. I don't disagree that education is an essential component of reducing crashes. But my mom won't stop getting nervous about left turns, and if the speed limits go up, she'll only get more anxious about driving. Something you seem to share with her, though in an inverse relationship. |
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Are you trying to say that you would be comfortable with drunks, elderly and inexperienced drivers doing a minimum of 70km/h on city roads? People tend to speed regardless of the posted limit so realistically 80km/h would be a common speed most would be traveling at. For a poor driver I would be more than happy if they went no more than 50km/h...or better yet, they make obtaining a licence more difficult to weed out the dangerous drivers...but that will never happen so unfortunately you, I, and everyone else will have to follow the rules set out by the Motor Vehicle Branch. |
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Ah....no such thing...I have always insisted (and observed) that they did notice the increased limits and then increased their speeds to what they consider appropriate above the new limit. |
Zulu, in your experience, what % of drivers chose (speed limit+15kph) before the limits were raised, and what % of drivers chose (speed limit+15kph) after the change? And to what do you attribute the reduction in collisions? |
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Where do you suggest the line that defines the "lowest common denominator" be drawn? |
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What Soundy said....as far as percentages go,....depends on what road, at what time, on what day, in what weather...and who is driving. Nothing cut and dried. Most people slow down in what they believe is bad weather, for instance. Early mornings with light traffic you tend to find a greater percentage of drivers choose to speed...however this can be a bad choice if wildlife is present. 2nd major cause of crashes on a 4 lane Hwy I worked was car vs elk/deer. They all happened in light traffic and usually early mornings or evenings when some speeders said it was "safe". In really general terms...and I mean really general terms, people who are going to speed are going to speed. Raising the limits does not keep them from breaking the law, they simply adjust their own personal limit to what they want. Jumping the Hwy 19 speed from 90 to 100 did not drop the observed speeds so that nobody drove over 100 now...it increased the average speed to 10-20 k above the new limit....what used to be 100 to 110 went to 110 to 120. As far as the reduction in numbers of collisions go ...I would have to examin the data in detail and be familiar with the details of each crash investigation, not just look at a list of numbers. It all depends on how the stats were collected. I know of one programme probably still being used, that automatically lists alcohol impairment as the primary causal factor for a crash. This was true even if legal levels of impairment were not reached...something as simple as a mention of any consumption at all & the programme insisted that booze caused the crash. It was being done because the programme designer had an investment in making the stats say what he wanted. Lies, dammed lies...and statistics, to quote someone who knew. |
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Any chance the BC Government is shovelling numbers from the "alcohol" column to the "speed" column when a drunk driver crashes his car while speeding? At the end of the day, total crashes were down at those control sites. Unfortunately nobody in government making the decisions has the testicular fortitude to buck the "speed kills" trend and raise the limits. Sadly there's a lot of money to be made by the government and private interests by misleading already ignorant members of the public and maintaining the status quo. |
Media Release - Distracted Driving Legislation Failing to Make the Roads Safer Quote:
And I believe it. I was watching someone merge onto the highway the other day. It's a fairly short onramp as far as onramps go, and traffic was pretty thick. The woman merging only had a small spot to squeeze into (I couldn't back off too much because the truck merging behind me was still accelerating) but I could clearly see her texting. Her phone was in her lap and she was spending equal amounts of time looking down as she was looking forwards - at the car she was tailgating at 80kph. The speed trap ahead gave me the warm and fuzzies however and I knew it was all going to be OK :) IMO, the law needs a revamp. Perhaps if you let people check their messages or send a quick text while stopped at a red light you can reduce the urge to send texts while merging onto the freeway. . |
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